2. Si Ninoy Worksheets : This first two pages of this pdf file is the same essay with several numbered sentences intended for the second of three worksheets.

The first worksheet (15 items) asks the student to answer whether a given statement about Ninoy is tama (correct) or mali (incorrect).

The second worksheet (15 items) refers to the underlined portions of the numbered sentences in the essay. The student is asked to determine whether the underlined portion is a parirala (phrase), sugnay (clause), or pangungusap (sentence).

The third worksheet (10 items) asks the student to underline the simuno/paksa (subject) or panaguri (predicate) of a sentence.

3. Pagkilala sa Panaguri ng Pangungusap_1; Mga sagot sa Pagkilala sa Panaguri ng Pangungusap_1 : This 15-item worksheet asks the student to underline the complete predicate (buong panaguri) of the sentence. Then the student is asked to write the simple predicate (payak na panaguri) on the blank before the item. The sentences are taken from or adapted from Pres. Benigno S. Aquino III’s 2013 SONA. This worksheet is appropriate for fifth or sixth graders.

The four pdf worksheets below are about Filipino sentences. Feel free to download, save, print, and photocopy these worksheets for your children or students. Please do not copy any part of the worksheets and/or distribute them for profit. Please leave a comment if you wish to make a correction in the answer keys provided in this post.

A simple sentence in Filipino is called payak na pangungusap. A simple sentence may have a simple subject (payak na simuno) or a compound subject (tambalang simuno). A simple sentence may also have a simple predicate (payak na panaguri) or a compound predicate (tambalang panaguri). The four types of simple sentences in Filipino have the following format:

In Filipino sentences, the predicate may come before the subject (Biglang huminto ang sasakyan.) or the subject may be placed in between parts of the predicate (Huminto ang sasakyan sa harap ng bahay niya).

The term “compound” refers to two or more subjects (nouns or pronouns) or predicates (usually verbs). A simple subject may also be a plural noun (ang mga puno) or a plural pronoun (kami, sila).

Worksheets 1 and 2 below ask the student to tell whether the subject of the sentence is a simple subject (payak na simuno) or a compound subject (tambalang simuno). It also asks the student to tell whether the predicate of the sentence is a simple predicate (payak na panaguri) or a compound predicate (tambalang panaguri).

A sentence may be classified as a simple sentence (payak), a compound sentence (tambalan), a complex sentence (hugnayan), or a compound-complex sentence (langkapan). Compound-complex sentences are not included in these worksheets.

A simple sentence contains a subject and a verb. It is also an independent clause (sugnay na makapag-iisa). A simple sentence expresses a complete thought.

In October 2011, I posted “A few Filipino worksheets.” A reader asked me for the answers to the worksheets. As I worked on the answers, I found some errors and I added a few more information to the files. The pdf files below show the worksheets and the answers to them. Answers to future worksheets will be posted as separate pdf files.

Here are a few Filipino worksheets. Please feel free to print and use them at home for your children or make copies for your students. Please note that the author is not a Filipino teacher. She would appreciate it if you would point out any mistakes that you may find in the worksheets. Thank you.